Alun Hughes, a teacher on many Cymdeithas Madog Welsh language
weeks, is a frequent contributor, especially in the area of how the Welsh language works. In this article, he introduces
a number of useful turns of phrase to help colour the learner's speech.

Don't be put off by the title, which I guess does sound rather dull, for
in reality idioms are anything but dull. Indeed, idioms are fascinating, so read on. Idioms are those peculiarities
of expression or phraseology, full of meaning (yet often meaningless when taken literally and commonly untranslateable
from one language to another), that give a language colour, flexibility and uniqueness. Some English examples will
show what I mean:

He ran as fast as his legs could carry him.

He made an off the cuff remark.

He really put a spanner in the works.

Mastery of idioms is often considered a sign of mastery of a language. Anyone
with a basic knowledge of English can come up with he ran as fast as he could, but it is a different matter
altogether -- and much more expressive -- to say he ran as fast as his legs could carry him. Welsh is no
different from English, and the purpose of this brief article is to introduce some distinctively Welsh idioms (or
as they're called in Welsh, idiomau or priod-ddulliau).

Distinctively Welsh, did I say? Perhaps I should qualify that. Many Welsh
idioms are indeed quite distinctive, but others are similar or even identical to idioms found in other languages.
Consider, for example, three idioms that use the verb berwi, to boil:

Roedd ei waed y berwi ar ôl clywed y newyddion.

(His blood was boiling after hearing the news)

Beth wnaeth i ti ddod? Mae eisiau berwi dy ben.

(What made you come? You need your head boiled / = read.)

Roedd y plentyn yn berwi fel cawl pys.

(The child was boiling like pea soup / = was chattering incessantly.)

The first example is a straight translation of the English (which is not
to say that the English came first!), the second is similar to the English, and the third is quite different. This
provides us with a simple (if not entirely hard and fast) classification for examining idioms in the Welsh language,
so let us begin with some idioms that have exact English counterparts:

Fe wnaeth Twm lyncu'r abwyd ar unwaith.

(Twm swallowed the bait immediately.)

Bu'r taith yn agoriad llygad i'r ferch fach.

(The journey was an eye-opener for the little girl.)

Gwisgodd esgidiau ail-law am ei draed.

(He wore second-hand shoes on his feet.)

Af i'r dre yn fy amser da fy hun.

(I'll go to town in my own good time.)

Roedd y bachgen dan fawd ei dad.

(The boy was under his father's thumb.)

Rydw i allan o'm dyfnder yn fy ngwaith.

(I am out of my depth in my work.)

Bydd rhaid i ni ladd amser cyn i'r trên ddod.

(We'll have to kill time before the train comes.)

Neidiodd o'r badell ffrio i'r tan.

(He jumped from the frying pan into the fire.)

Mae hi'n siarad trwy ei het.

(She is talking through her hat.)

Idioms like these are familiar enough to English speaker, but sometimes
you need to be careful lest you misinterpret them. Take for example the saying ail i ddim. Literally translated
this is second to none, but the correct meaning is next to nothing, as in the sentence, roedd
ganddi ail i ddim ar ôl (She had next to nothing left). Which brings us to the second group, comprising
idioms that are similar to English ones yet have a special Welsh flavour:

(I'm looking forward to lighting a fire on an old hearth / = renewing an old love.)

Mae hi yn llygad ei lle yn ei barn.

(She is the eye of her place / = totally correct / in her opinion.)

Roedd y cwbl yn freuddwyd gwrach wrth ei hewyllys.

(It was all the dream of a witch according to her will / = wishful thinking.)

Paid â chodi pais ar ôl piso.

(Don't lift a petticoad after p---ing / = cry over spilt milk; shut the stable door after the horse has
gone.)

All these idioms -- even the last one -- appear in Llyfr o Idiomau Cymraeg
by R. E. Jones, published by Gwasg John Penry. The same author has also produced a second volume, Ail Lyfr o
Idiomau Cymraeg. Two other very useful collections are: Cymraeg Idiomatig by C. P. Cule, published by
D. Brown a'i Feibion; and Y Geiriau Bach by Cennard Davies, published by Gwasg Gomer. The latter is aimed
specifically at learners, and as the title (The Little Words) hints, groups idioms according to the prepositions
(am, ar, at, dros, gan, etc.) that occur in them.

Part of the richness of any language derives from its idioms. In a world
language like English, new idioms are being created almost daily -- relatively recent examples are: the bottom
line, put on the back burner, and get a handle on. Welsh, like all languages, has a vast store of native idioms,
but the process of idiom creation proceeds much more slowly than in English, and there is a real danger that the
stock of idioms will become progressively depleted (and the language impoverished) as time goes on. The solution?
Learn these expressions, and use them! To quote in translation Thomas Parry's introduction to Llyfr o Idiomau
Cymraeg:

"I hope that everyone who uses Welsh seriously in speech and in writing will make room for these sayings
in their language, in order to preserve them for our linguistic consciousness as a nation ... There has never been
a greater need than there is today for contemplating the words of Emrys ap Iwan: 'As shall be the language, so
shall be the man, and so shall be the nation. Good language promotes civilization, and poor language, or language
that is not used well, hinders civilization.'"